Word: outlook
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...into 1932. What occurred in last week's elections was widely projected forward, in & out of the Press, in an attempt to illuminate the future and read the writing on the 1932 wall. Most unbiased observers agreed that the immediate outlook was better for the Democrats than the Republicans. The nipping wind of disapproval that started blowing against the White House in 1930 elections had not abated. The Hoover Administration, a tacit issue even in local contests, had regained none of its lost popularity. In 1928 President Hoover carried New Jersey by 309,000 votes. Last week New Jersey went...
...professors will be among the speakers at the fourth annual meeting of the Harvard Economic Society at the Hotel Statler in Boston this week. Tomorrow Professor J. D. Black '96 will speak on "The Agricultural Situation" and Professors C. J. Bullock and W. L. Crum will discuss "The Business Outlook." On Saturday Dean W. B. Donham '98 of the Business School will speak on "Banking Policy in This Depression" and Professor J. F. Ebersole will speak on "The Recent Operation of the Gold Standard...
...Reader's Digest. It is an anthology of articles culled from the press of the world about Jews, Jewish problems, or subjects affecting Jews. By no means all the material is selected from the Jewish press. In the first issue are articles from Nation, Christian Century, FORTUNE, Outlook, Harper's, New Republic. In the publishers' words the magazine will "convey a cross section picture of the Jew . . . express no editorial opinion, sponsor no 'isms' . . . leave to the organizations which are better equipped for the purpose the task of safeguarding Jewish rights...
...surveyed the decision, found it to his liking. The Commission, by denying the horizontal increase (which might diverge more freight from the roads than the benefits would compensate for), felt that the lines "had been saved from the consequences of a mistake." Professor Ripley foresaw "a distinct betterment of outlook for the future." Others thought otherwise. Liberal Walter Lippmann colyumed in the New York Herald Tribune: "The Commission has evidently tried to select particular commodities, which either have not fallen in price as much as others or are so bulky and necessary that they have to be carried on railroads...
...goodness sake don't go to aping Outlook in putting absurd and outlandish caricatures on your outside cover. The cover on your Oct. 5 issue is revolting...